You knew that school that played in the BCS Championship Game in Glendale, Ariz., in January of 2011 was going to get it one day.

That day is Wednesday.

That school, popular opinion to the contrary, is not Auburn. It's Oregon.

The NCAA Committee on Infractions has scheduled a teleconference for Wednesday morning at 10 CT to discuss its findings in the major case against Oregon football. Greg Sankey of the Infractions Committee, whose day job is executive associate commissioner and chief operating officer of the SEC, will conduct the teleconference.

The findings will be released to the media 30 minutes earlier.

The case began two months after Oregon's 22-19 loss to Auburn in the national championship game. In March of 2011, Yahoo! Sports reported that the Oregon program had paid the Houston-based operator of a scouting service, Will Lyles, $25,000 for recruiting information that was later proven outdated and worthless.

What really raised eyebrows was that Lyles also had served as a mentor to several Oregon signees, including Heisman finalist LaMichael James and one-time Auburn recruit Lache Seastrunk, who later left Oregon and transferred to Baylor.

Among the charges against the Ducks: Improper use of recruiting services; impermissible recruiting phone calls; and failure to monitor. Oregon has admitted to some major violations.

The penalties handed down by the Infractions Committee will be an interesting case study with the entire NCAA enforcement system in crisis. In a sense, Oregon already has been on probation for more than two years, given the length of the investigation and the uncertainty of the outcome.

You can go broke trying to predict the result of an infractions case, and Oregon will have the right to appeal any penalties, but one thing is certain.

Former Oregon coach Chip Kelly, who's now the head coach of the Philadelphia Eagles, won't suffer. Whether it was his intention or not, he really did get out of town ahead of the posse.